Imperial Valley Press

With the convention­s now over, what’s next in campaign 2020?

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden have emerged from their presidenti­al nominating convention­s with each candidate believing he has a head of steam. Trump’s job approval ratings and standing in polls are perilously low for an incumbent, but Biden and other Democrats vividly remember 2016, when Trump made an against-all-odds October comeback and defeated Hillary Clinton.

Five key questions as the 2020 campaign moves toward the fall home stretch:

WHAT WILL A COVID-19 CAMPAIGN LOOK LIKE?

Expect a flurry of travel and speeches as the candidates spend the next nine weeks desperatel­y trying to move the needle and win new votes against the backdrop of a global pandemic.

Trump is set to launch an aggressive travel schedule with multiple events a week, according to advisers. After an arena rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, early this summer drew a paltry crowd, his campaign has settled on a new format in the age of the coronaviru­s: packing smaller crowds into open-air airport hangars. The campaign has also been handing out masks at its events and, on Friday, told attendees they would be mandatory, per local regulation­s. He’s also planning a series of policy speeches and is expected to continue to use the powers of his office — including signing executive orders and issuing pardons — to help his prospects. Biden is planning to ramp up travel to battlegrou­nd states after Labor Day after spending most of the spring and summer at his home in Wilmington, Delaware, holding mostly virtual events, with only occasional travel to tightly controlled gatherings. Campaign co- chair Cedric Richmond said the former vice president will be active but emphasized that Biden’s events still will follow public health guidelines. That means no indoor, crowded rallies and lots of mask-wearing. Expect plenty of roundtable­s, meet-and-greets and question-and-answer sessions. If there are larger gatherings, the drive- in watch party outside Biden’s nomination acceptance address could be the blueprint.

WHOSE VERSION OF THE OTHER CONVINCES MORE VOTERS?

Trump will continue trying to win back suburban, female and older voters, and win over independen­ts and people who didn’t vote four years ago, by painting the election as a stark choice between law and order and anarchy and between a radical, socialist takeover and economic prosperity. Never mind that Biden has spent decades in the political establishm­ent and California Sen. Kamala Harris, his running mate, is a former prosecutor. Trump will use every scare tactic he can muster.

If his 2016 race is any indication, expect Trump to launch a scorched-earth strategy if he feels he’s losing come October. Realizing his only shot then was to drive up Clinton’s unfavorabl­e ratings to match his own, Trump’s campaign used every trick they could think of, including inviting women who accused Bill Clinton of rape and unwanted sexual advances to appear at one of the debates.

Attacks on Biden’s family? Accusation­s he’s drugged up or senile? There is no line Trump won’t cross to win.

Biden will continue to hammer Trump as a fundamenta­l threat to democracy and try to make the case that the president is a selfish, corrupt figure incapable of empathy. Biden will sell himself as a steady, experience­d hand with a progressiv­e policy agenda on issues including climate action and criminal justice

-- just not as progressiv­e as Trump tries to make him when he blasts Biden as the front man for a “radical” takeover.

Biden’s campaign believes that he is enough of a known quantity that voters beyond Trump’s base simply won’t buy the president’s descriptio­ns of the former vice president. If they are right, they see Trump’s base-driven campaign as one that opens up a wide coalition -- from progressiv­es who aren’t in love with Biden to anti-Trump moderates Republican­s -- for the Democratic ticket.

CORONAVIRU­S AND AN OCTOBER SURPRISE?

Biden has defined his White House bid from the start as a moral and competency case against Trump. The COVID- 19 pandemic has only intensifie­d the approach. Biden’s campaign believes there’s no cover for Trump with the coronaviru­s death toll surpassing 180,000 and climbing, cases nearing the 6 million mark, unemployme­nt hovering in double digits and Congress at an impasse on further economic aid.

In remarks Thursday before Trump’s nomination acceptance speech, Harris summarized the campaign’s thinking: “Trump’s incompeten­ce is nothing new,” she said, “but in January of this year, it became deadly.” She said the incumbent “failed at the most basic and important job of a president ... to protect us.”

 ?? AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File ?? In this July 14 file photo, Democratic presidenti­al candidate, former Vice President Joe Biden, speaks during a campaign event in Wilmington, Del.
AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File In this July 14 file photo, Democratic presidenti­al candidate, former Vice President Joe Biden, speaks during a campaign event in Wilmington, Del.

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